Sergio Leone

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[a panoramic long shot of what is apparently supposed to be a valley in the American West; nothing happens; the silence is finally broken by an incredibly fake-sounding gunshot]

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Sergio Leone

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Was an influential Italian filmmaker

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Known for inventing

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The “Spaghetti Western” subgenre;

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His unique visual aesthetic

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That was characterized by

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Extreme close-ups

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Juxtaposed with

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Long, panoramic shots;

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His preference for

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Morally ambiguous characters;

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His frequent collaboration

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With men like

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Clint Eastwood

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And

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Ennio Morricone;

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And his films’

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Incredibly laborious

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Opening credit sequences.

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Contents

Early Life

GRUFF SPANISH-LOOKING MAN (words don’t match lips): Hello, amigo! What can I do for you today?

MORALLY AMBIGUOUS CAUCASIAN (words do match lips): Tell me about the early life of Italian director Sergio Leone.

GRUFF SPANISH-LOOKING MAN: I’m afraid I don’t know anything about that.

MORALLY AMBIGUOUS CAUCASIAN: [draws gun] Tell me about the early life of Sergio Leone!

GRUFF SPANISH-LOOKING MAN: I don’t know anything about—

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[The Spanish-looking man’s hat is shot off]

MORALLY AMBIGUOUS CAUCASIAN: What do you know?

GRUFF SPANISH-LOOKING MAN: He was…he was born in Rome…to parents that…that were…involved in cinema!

MORALLY AMBIGUOUS CAUCASIAN: What else?

GRUFF SPANISH-LOOKING MAN: He attempted to go into law before becoming a director! And his first feature film was The Colossus of Rhodes!

MORALLY AMBIGUOUS CAUCASIAN: Hmmm….

[Morally Ambiguous Caucasian rides into the distance to the tune of his own personal leitmotif made up of a guitar, a pan flute, and a small chorus of men yelling “Ah-yah ah-yah ah-yah!”]

Cinematic Motifs

Extreme Close-Ups



Clint Eastwood's face.





Sergio Leone would often film things extremely close up. He typically favored using this technique with peoples’ faces and hands, though he also did it in other situations as well.





Extreme Long Shots



A cemetery.





Sergio Leone also favored shots from extremely far away. He typically filmed landscapes and Mexican standoffs in this manner.







Juxtaposing Extreme Close-Ups and Extreme Long Shots



Eli Wallach's face, with mountains.





Leone would sometimes juxtapose extreme close-ups with extreme longs shots.

He would do this either by using deep focus to achieve both a close-up and long shot simultaneously, or by alternating between panoramic and close-up shots.





Clint Eastwood’s Poncho







Sergio Leone also had an attachment to the poncho actor Clint Eastwood wore in A Fistful of Dollars. Leone liked the poncho so much that it’s also featured in For a Few Dollars More and The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly.





Selected Filmography

A Fistful of Dollars




A Fistful of Dollars is a film about a morally ambiguous though ultimately good-hearted lone gunman who comes to a town dominated by two rival gangs. It is actually an unauthorized remake of Akira Kurosawa’s film Yojimbo, which is about a morally ambiguous though ultimately good-hearted lone samurai who comes to a town dominated by two rival gangs. This film marks Leone’s first collaboration with both composer Ennio Morricone and actor Clint Eastwood.




For a Few Dollars More





A morally ambiguous though ultimately vengeful bounty hunter played by Lee Van Cleef teams up with a morally ambiguous though ultimately good-hearted gunman played by Clint Eastwood to hunt down and kill a morally ambiguous though ultimately malicious criminal played by a totally irrelevant actor.




The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly





A morally ambiguous though ultimately good gunman, a morally ambiguous though ultimately bad gunman, and a morally ambiguous though ultimately ugly gunman attempt to find a cache of hidden gold.




Once Upon a Time in the West






A morally ambiguous though ultimately evil gunman played by Henry Fonda is eventually undone by a morally ambiguous though ultimately good Charles Bronson.




Duck, You Sucker






A morally ambiguous though ultimately good-hearted bandit played by Rod Steiger meets a morally ambiguous though ultimately good hearted IRA explosives expert played by James Coburn, and together they get drawn into the Mexican Revolution.




Once Upon a Time in America






Morally ambiguous gangster immigrants do morally ambiguous gangster things.







The Dramatic Final Standoff

CLINT EASTWOOD: Alright.

[he tosses a film reel to the ground]

CLINT EASTWOOD: This is the unedited director’s cut of Once Upon a Time in America. You all know what has to happen.

























































































































































































































See Also


Filmmakers of the World (and America)
Epic Visionaries

Michelangelo Antonioni | Ingmar Bergman | Don Bluth | Peter Bogdanovich | Tim Burton | Coen Brothers | Clint Eastwood | Federico Fellini | Terry Gilliam | Norman Grossfeld | Alfred Hitchcock | Jim Jarmusch | Charlie Kaufman | Abbas Kiarostami | Stanley Kubrick | Sergio Leone | David Lynch | Martin Scorsese | Steven Spielberg | Quentin Tarantino | Andrei Tarkovsky | Orson Welles | Robert Rodriguez | Zack Snyder

Not-So-Epic Visionaries

Michael Bay | Mel Gibson | Uwe Boll | John Carpenter | Kevin Costner | David Cronenberg | Jason Friedberg and Aaron Seltzer | Peter Jackson | George Lucas | Guy Ritchie | George Romero | Eli Roth | M. Night Shyamalan | Blitz Smith | Kevin Smith | Alan Smithee | Sylvester Stallone | John Woo | Ed Wood | Rob Zombie

Highly Respected in France

Woody Allen | Darren Aronofsky | Jean-Luc Godard | Fritz Lang | Jerry Lewis | Rob Schneider | François Truffaut

Highly Confusing in Japan

Dario Argento | Akira Kurosawa | Russ Meyer | Hayao Miyazaki | Mr. Takashi of Japan

Highly Disturbing in Mexico

Guillermo del Toro

Highly Racist in Suid-Afrika

Neill Blomkamp

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